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and declaration, that their word was the sword of | love of peace and justice into the minds of the Modeath. Like the first caliphs, the first successors of Zingis seldom appeared in person at the head of their victorious armies. On the banks of the Onon and Selinga the royal or golden horde exhibited the contrast of simplicity and greatness; of the roasted sheep and mare's milk which composed their banquets; and of a distribution in one day of five hundred waggons of gold and silver. The ambassadors and princes of Europe and Asia were compelled to undertake this distant and laborious pilgrimage: and the life and reign of the great dukes of Russia, the kings of Georgia and Armenia, the sultans of Iconium, and the emirs of Persia, were decided by the frown or smile of the great khan. The sons and grandsons of Zingis had been accustomed to the pastoral life; but the village of Caracorum was gradually ennobled by their election and residence. A change of manners is implied in the removal of Octai and Mangou from a tent to a house; and their example was imitated by the princes of their family and the great officers of the empire. Instead of the boundless forest, the enclosure of a park afforded the more indolent pleasures of the chace; their new habitations were decorated with painting and sculpture; their superfluous treasures were cast in fountains, and basons, and statues of massy silver; and the artists of China and Paris vied with each other in the service of the great khan. Caracorum contained two streets, the one of Chinese mechanics, the other of Mahometan traders; and the places of religious worship, one Nestorian church, two moschs, and twelve temples of various idols, may represent in some degree the number and division of inhabitants. Yet a French missionary declares, that the town of St. Denys, near Paris, was more considerable than the Tartar capital; and that the whole palace of Mangou was scarcely equal to a tenth part of that Benedictine abbey. The conquests of Russia and Syria might amuse the vanity of the great khans; but they were seated on the borders of China; the acquisition of that empire was the nearest and most interesting object; and they might learn from their pastoral economy, that it is for the advantage of the shepherd to protect and propagate his flock. I have already celebrated the wisdom and virtue of a Mandarin, who prevented the desolation of five populous and cultivated provinces. In a spotless administration of thirty years, this friend of his country and of mankind continually laboured to mitigate, or suspend, the havoc of war; to save the monuments, and to rekindle the flame, of science; to restrain the military commander by the restoration of civil magistrates; and to instil the

adopt the manners of China, A. D.

1259, 1368.

h The map of D'Anville, and the Chinese Itineraries (de Guignes, tom. i. part ii. p. 57.) seem to mark the position of Holin, or Caracorum, about six hundred miles to the north-west of Pekin. The distance be tween Selinginsky and Pekin is near 2000 Russian versts, between 1300 and 1400 English miles. (Bell's Travels, vol. ii. p. 67.)

i Rubruquis found at Caracorum his countryman Guillaume Boueher, orfevre de Paris, who had executed for the khan a silver tree, supported by four lions, and ejecting four different liquors. Abulghazi (part iv. p. 336.) mentions the painters of Kitay or China.

guls. He struggled with the barbarism of the first conquerors; but his salutary lessons produced a rich harvest in the second generation. The northern, and by degrees the southern, empire, acquiesced in the government of Cublai, the lieutenant, and afterwards the successor, of Mangou; and the nation was loyal to a prince who had been educated in the manners of China. He restored the forms of her venerable constitution; and the victors submitted to the laws, the fashions, and even the prejudices, of the vanquished people. This peaceful triumph, which has been more than once repeated, may be ascribed in a great measure to the numbers and servitude of the Chinese. The Mogul army was dissolved in a vast and populous country; and their emperors adopted with pleasure a political system, which gives to the prince the solid substance of despotism, and leaves to the subject the empty names of philosophy, freedom, and filial obedience. Under the reign of Cublai, letters and commerce, peace and justice, were restored; the great canal, of five hundred miles, was opened from Nankin to the capital: he fixed his residence at Pekin; and displayed in his court the magnificence of the greatest monarch of Asia. Yet this learned prince declined from the pure and simple religion of his great ancestor; he sacrificed to the idol Fo; and his blind attachment to the lamas of Thibet and the bonzes of China provoked the censure of the disciples of Confucius. His successors polluted the palace with a crowd of eunuchs, physicians, and astrologers, while thirteen millions of their subjects were consumed in the provinces by famine. One hundred and forty years after the death of Zingis, his degenerate race, the dynasty of the Yuen, was expelled by a revolt of the native Chinese; and the Mogul emperors were lost in the oblivion of Division of the the desert. Before this revolution, they Mogul empire, had forfeited their supremacy over the dependent branches of their house, the khans of Kipzak and Russia, the khans of Zagatai, or Transoxiana, and the khans of Iran or Persia. By their distance and power these royal lieutenants had soon been released from the duties of obedience; and after the death of Cublai, they scorned to accept a sceptre or a title from his unworthy successors. According to their respective situation they maintained the simplicity of the pastoral life, or assumed the luxury of the cities of Asia; but the princes and their hordes were alike disposed for the reception of a foreign worship. After some hesitation between the Gospel and the Koran, they conformed to the religion of Mahomet; and while they adopted for their brethren the Arabs and Persians, they re

A. D.

1259-1300.

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nounced all intercourse with the ancient Moguls, | stantinople at the head of four hundred thousand the idolaters of China.

the Greek em.

A. D. 1240-
1304.

Escape of Con. In this shipwreck of nations, some stantinople and surprise may be excited by the escape pire from the of the Roman empire, whose relics, at Moguls, the time of the Mogul invasion, were dismembered by the Greeks and Latins. Less potent than Alexander, they were pressed, like the Macedonian, both in Europe and Asia, by the shepherds of Scythia: and had the Tartars undertaken the siege, Constantinople must have yielded to the fate of Pekin, Samarcand, and Bagdad. The glorious and voluntary retreat of Batou from the Danube was insulted by the vain triumph of the Franks and Greeks;' and in a second expedition death surprised him in full march to attack the capital of the Caesars. His brother Borga carried the Tartar arms into Bulgaria and Thrace; but he was diverted from the Byzantine war by a visit to Novogorod, in the fifty-seventh degree of latitude, where he numbered the inhabitants and regulated the tributes of Russia. The Mogul khan formed an alliance with the Mamalukes against his brethren of Persia: three hundred thousand horse penetrated through the gates of Derbend; and the Greeks might rejoice in the first example of domestic war. After the recovery of Constantinople, Michael Palæologus, at a distance from his court and army, was surprised and surrounded, in a Thracian castle, by twenty thousand Tartars. But the object of their march was a private interest: they came to the deliverance of Azzadin, the Turkish sultan; and were content with his person and the treasure of the emperor. Their general Noga, whose name is perpetuated in the hordes of Astracan, raised a formidable rebellion against Mengo Timour, the third of the khans of Kipzak; obtained in marriage Maria the natural daughter of Palæologus; and guarded the dominions of his friend and father. The subsequent invasions of a Scythian cast were those of outlaws and fugitives: and some thousands of Alani and Comans, who had been driven from their native seats, were reclaimed from a vagrant life, and enlisted in the service of the empire. Such was the influence in Europe of the invasion of the Moguls. The first terror of their arms secured, rather than disturbed, the peace of the Roman Asia.

The

sultan of Iconium solicited a personal interview with John Vataces; and his artful policy encouraged the Turks to defend their barrier against the common enemy." That barrier indeed was soon overthrown; and the servitude and ruin of the Seljukians exposed the nakedness of the Greeks. The formidable Holagou threatened to march to Con

1 Some repulse of the Moguls in Hungary (Matthew Paris, p. 545, 546.) might propagate and colour the report of the union and victory of the kings of the Franks on the coufines of Bulgaria. Abulpharagius, (Dynast. p. 310.) after forty years, beyond the Tigris, might be easily

deceived.

m See Pachymer, 1. iii. c. 25. and 1. ix. c. 26, 27. and the false alarm at Nice, l. iii. c. 27. Nicephorus Gregoras, I. iv. c. 6.

G. Acropolita, p. 36, 37. Nic. Greg. 1. ii. c. 6. 1. iv. c. 5. Abulpharagius, who wrote in the year 1284, declares, that the Moguis, since the fabulous defeat of Batou, had not attacked either the Franks or Greeks; and of this he is a competent witness. Hayton,

men; and the groundless panic of the citizens of Nice will present an image of the terror which he had inspired. The accident of a procession, and the sound of a doleful litany, "From the fury of the Tartars, good Lord, deliver us," had scattered the hasty report of an assault and massacre. In the blind credulity of fear, the streets of Nice were crowded with thousands of both sexes, who knew not from what or to whom they fled; and some hours elapsed before the firmness of the military officers could relieve the city from this imaginary foe. But the ambition of Holagou and his successors was fortunately diverted by the conquest of Bagdad, and a long vicissitude of Syrian wars: their hostility to the Moslems inclined them to unite with the Greeks and Franks; and their generosity or contempt had offered the kingdom of Anatolia as the reward of an Armenian vassal. The fragments of the Seljukian monarchy were disputed by the emirs who had occupied the cities or the mountains; but they all confessed the supremacy of the khans of Persia; and he often interposed his authority, and sometimes his arms, to check their depredations, and to preserve the peace and balance of his Turkish frontier. The death of Decline of the Cazan, one of the greatest and most Mogul khans of accomplished princes of the house of A. D. 1304. Zingis, removed this salutary conMay 31. trol; and the decline of the Moguls gave a free scope to the rise and progress of the OTTOMAN EM

PIRE.

Persia,

Origin of the
Ottomans,

A. D. 1240, &c.

After the retreat of Zingis, the sultan Gelaleddin of Carizme had returned from India to the possession and defence of his Persian kingdoms. In the space of eleven years, that hero fought in person fourteen battles; and such was his activity, that he led his cavalry in seventeen days from Teflis to Kerman, a march of a thousand miles. Yet he was oppressed by the jealousy of the Moslem princes, and the innumerable armies of the Moguls: and after his last defeat, Gelaleddin perished ignobly in the mountains of Curdistan. His death dissolved a veteran and adventurous army, which included under the name of Carizmians or Corasmins many Turkman hordes, that had attached themselves to the sultan's fortune. The bolder and more powerful chiefs invaded Syria, and violated the holy sepulchre of Jerusalem: the more humble engaged in the service of Aladin, sultan of Iconium; and among these were the obscure fathers of the Ottoman line. They had formerly pitched their tents near the southern banks of the Oxus, in the plains of Mahan and likewise, the Armeniac prince, celebrates their friendship for himself and his nation.

P Pachymer gives a splendid character of Cazan Khan, the rival of Cyrus and Alexander, (l. xii. c. 1.) In the conclusion of his history, (1. xiii. c. 36) he hopes much from the arrival of 30,000 Tochars or Tartars, who were ordered by the successor of Cazan to restrain the Turks of Bithynia, A. D. 1308.

q The origin of the Ottoman dynasty is illustrated by the critical learning of M. M. de Guignes (Hist. des Huns. tom. iv. p. 329-337.) and D'Anville, (Empire Turc, p. 14-22.) two inhabitants of Paris, from whom the orientals may learn the history and geography of their own country.

Nesa; and it is somewhat remarkable, that the same spot should have produced the first authors of the Parthian and Turkish empires. At the head, or in the rear, of a Carizmian army, Soliman Shah was drowned in the passage of the Euphrates: his son Orthogrul became the soldier and subject of Aladin, and established at Surgut, on the banks of the Sangar, a camp of four hundred families or tents, whom he governed fifty-two years both in peace and war. He was the father of Thaman, or Reign of Othman, Athman, whose Turkish name has A. D. 1299-1326. been melted into the appellation of the caliph Othman; and if we describe that pastoral chief as a shepherd and a robber, we must separate from those characters all idea of ignominy and baseness. Othman possessed, and perhaps surpassed, the ordinary virtues of a soldier; and the circumstances of time and place were propitious to his independence and success. The Seljukian dynasty was no more; and the distance and decline of the Mogul khans soon enfranchised him from the control of a superior. He was situate on the verge of the Greek empire: the Koran sanctified his gazi, or holy war, against the infidels; and their political errors unlocked the passes of mount Olympus, and invited him to descend into the plains of Bithynia. Till the reign of Palæologus, these passes had been vigilantly guarded by the militia of the country, who were repaid by their own safety and an exemption from taxes. The emperor abolished their privilege and assumed their office; but the tribute was rigorously collected, the custody of the passes was neglected, and the hardy mountaineers degenerated into a trembling crowd of peasants without spirit or discipline. It was on the twenty-seventh of July, in the year twelve hundred and ninety-nine of the christian æra, that Othman first invaded the territory of Nicomedia;' and the singular accuracy of the date seems to disclose some foresight of the rapid and destructive growth of the monster. The annals of the twenty-seven years of his reign would exhibit a repetition of the same inroads; and his hereditary troops were multiplied in each campaign by the accession of captives and volunteers. Instead of retreating to the hills, he maintained the most useful and defensible posts; fortified the towns and castles which he had first pillaged; and renounced the pastoral life for the baths and palaces of his infant capitals. But it was not till Othman was oppressed by age and infirmities, that he received the welcome news of the conquest of Prusa, which had been surrendered by famine or treachery to the arms of his

See Pachymer, l. x. c. 25, 26. l. xiii. c. 33-36. and concerning the guard of the mountains, 1. i. c. 3-6. Nicephorus Gregoras, 1. vii. c. I. and the first book of Laonicas Chalcondyles, the Athenian.

I am ignorant whether the Turks have any writers older than Mahomet II. nor can I reach beyond a meagre chronicle, (Annales Turcici ad Annum 1550.) translated by John Gaudier, and published by Leun. clavius, (ad calcem Laonic. Chalcond. p. 311-350.) with copious pandects, or commentaries. The history of the Growth and Decay (A. D. 1300-1683.) of the Othman empire, was translated into English from the Latin MS. of Demetrius Cantemir, prince of Moldavia, (London, 1734, in folio.) The author is guilty of strange blunders in oriental history; but he was conversant with the language, the annals, and the institutions of the Turks. Cathemir partly draws his materials from the Synopsis of Saadi Effendi of Larissa, dedicated in the year 1696 to sul.

son Orchan. The glory of Othman is chiefly founded on that of his descendants; but the Turks have transcribed or composed a royal testament of his last counsels of justice and moderation.s

A. D. 1326-1360.

From the conquest of Prusa, we may Reign of Orchan, date the true æra of the Ottoman empire. The lives and possessions of the christian subjects were redeemed by a tribute or ransom of thirty thousand crowns of gold; and the city, by the labours of Orchan, assumed the aspect of a Mahometan capital; Prusa was decorated with a mosch, a college, and an hospital, of royal foundation; the Seljukian coin was changed for the name and impression of the new dynasty: and the most skilful professors, of human and divine knowledge, attracted the Persian and Arabian students from the ancient schools of oriental learning. The office of vizir was instituted for Aladin, the brother of Orchan; and a different habit distinguished the citizens from the peasants, the Moslems from the infidels. All the troops of Othman had consisted of loose squadrons of Turkman cavalry; who served without pay and fought without discipline: but a regular body of infantry was first established and trained by the prudence of his son. A great number of volunteers was enrolled with a small stipend, but with the permission of living at home, unless they were summoned to the field: their rude manners, and seditious temper, disposed Orchan to educate his young captives as his soldiers and those of the prophet; but the Turkish peasants were still allowed to mount on horseback, and follow his standard, with the appellation and the hopes of freebooters. By these arts be formed an army of twenty-five thousand Moslems: a train of batteringengines was framed for the use of sieges; and the first successful experiment was made on the cities of Nice and Nicomedia. Orchan His conquest of granted a safe-conduct to all who Bithynia, were desirous of departing with their families and effects; but the widows of the slain were given in marriage to the conquerors; and the sacrilegious plunder, the books, the vases, and the images, were sold or ransomed at Constantinople. The emperor Andronicus the younger was vanquished and wounded by the son of Othman he subdued the whole province or kingdom of Bithynia, as far as the shores of the Bosphorus and Hellespont; and the christians confessed the justice and clemency of a reign, which claimed the voluntary attachment of the Turks of Asia. Yet Orchan was content with the modest title of emir; and in the

A. D. 1326-1339

tan Mustapha, and a valuable abridgment of the original historians. In one of the Ramblers, Dr. Johnson praises Knolles (a General History of the Turks to the present year, London, 1603.) as the first of hist rians, unhappy only in the choice of his subject. Yet I much doubt whether a partial and verbose compilation from Latin writers, thirteen hundred folio pages of speeches and battles, can either instruct amuse an enlightened age, which requires from the historian some tuc ture of philosophy and criticism.

+ Cantacuzene, though he relates the battle and heroic flight of the younger Andronicus, (I. ii. c. 6, 7, 8.) dissembles by his silence the los of Prusa, Nice, and Nicomedia, which are fairly confessed by Nierphorus Gregoras, (l. viii. 15. ix. 9. 13. xi. 6.) It appears that Nice was taken by Orchan in 1330, and Nicomedia in 1339, which are somewhat different from the Turkish dates.

A. D. 1300, &c.

list of his compeers, the princes of Roum or Ana- | achieved, almost without resistance, the conquest of Division of Ana. tolia," his military forces were surtolia among the passed by the emirs of Ghermian and Turkish emirs, Caramania, each of whom could bring into the field an army of forty thousand men. Their dominions were situate in the heart of the Seljukian kingdom: but the holy warriors, though of inferior note, who formed new principalities on the Greek empire, are more conspicuous in the light of history. The maritime country from the Propontis to the Mæander and the isle of Rhodes, so long threatened and so often pillaged, was finally lost about the thirtieth year of Andronicus the elder. Two Turkish chieftains, Sarukhan and Aidin, left their names to their conquests, and their conquests to their posterity. The captivity or ruin Loss of the Asiatic provinces, of the seven churches of Asia was conA. D. 1312, &c. summated; and the barbarous lords of Ionia and Lydia still trample on the monuments of classic and christian antiquity. In the loss of Ephesus, the christians deplored the fall of the first angel, the extinction of the first candlestick, of the Revelations: the desolation is complete; and the temple of Diana, or the church of Mary, will equally elude the search of the curious traveller. The circus and three stately theatres of Laodicea are now peopled with wolves and foxes; Sardis is reduced to a miserable village; the God of Mahomet, without a rival or a son, is invoked in the moschs of Thyatira and Pergamus; and the populousness of Smyrna is supported by the foreign trade of the Franks and Armenians. Philadelphia alone has been saved by prophecy, or courage. At a distance from the sea, forgotten by the emperors, encompassed on all sides by the Turks, her valiant citizens defended their religion and freedom above fourscore years; and at length capitulated with the proudest of the Ottomans. Among the Greek colonies and churches of Asia, Philadelphia is still erect; a column in a scene of ruins; a pleasing example, that the paths of honour and safety may sometimes be the same. The servitude of Rhodes was delayed about two centuries by the establishment of the knights of St. John of Jerusalem:

The knights of

Rhodes, A. D. 1310. Aug. 15A. D. 1523.

Jan. 1.

Bithynia; and the same disorders encouraged the Turkish emirs of Lydia and Ionia to build a fleet, and to pillage the adjacent islands and the seacoast of Europe. In the defence of his life and honour, Cantacuzene was tempted to prevent, or imitate, his adversaries; by calling to his aid the public enemies of his religion and country. Amir, the son of Aidin, concealed under a Turkish garb the humanity and politeness of a Greek; he was united with the great domestic by mutual esteem and reciprocal services; and their friendship is compared, in the vain rhetoric of the times, to the perfect union of Orestes and Pylades. On the report of the danger of his friend, who was persecuted by an ungrateful court, the prince of Ionia assembled at Smyrna a fleet of three hundred vessels, with an army of twenty-nine thousand men; sailed in the depth of winter, and cast anchor at the mouth of the Hebrus. From thence, with a chosen band of two thousand Turks, he marched along the banks of the river, and rescued the empress, who was besieged in Demotica by the wild Bulgarians. At that disastrous moment, the life or death of his beloved Cantacuzene was concealed by his flight into Servia: but the grateful Irene, impatient to behold her deliverer, invited him to enter the city, and accompanied her message with a present of rich apparel, and a hundred horses. By a peculiar strain of delicacy, the gentle barbarian refused, in the absence of an unfortunate friend, to visit his wife, or to taste the luxuries of the palace; sustained in his tent the rigour of the winter; and rejected the hospitable gift, that he might share the hardships of two thousand companions, all as deserving as himself of that honour and distinction. Necessity and revenge might justify his predatory excursions by sea and land: he left nine thousand five hundred men for the guard of his fleet; and persevered in the fruitless search of Cantacuzene, till his embarkation was hastened by a fictitious letter, the severity of the season, the clamours of his independent troops, and the weight of his spoil and captives. In the prosecution of the civil war, the prince of Ionia twice returned to Europe; joined his arms with those of the emperor; besieged Thessalonica, and threatened Constantinople. Calumny might affix some reproach on his imperfect aid, his hasty departure, and a bribe of ten thousand crowns, which he accepted from the Byzantine court; but his friend was satisfied; and the conduct of Amir is excused by the more sacred duty of defending against the Latins his hereditary dominions. The maritime power of the Turks had united the pope,

under the discipline of the order, that island emerged into fame and opulence; the noble and warlike monks were renowned by land and sea; and the bulwark of Christendom provoked, and repelled, the arms of the Turks and Saracens.

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z Consult the fourth book of the Histoire de l'Ordre de Malthe par l'Abbé de Vertot. That pleasing writer betrays his ignorance, in supposing that Othman, a freebooter of the Bithynian hills, could besiege Rhodes by sea and land.

a Nicephorus Gregoras has expatiated with pleasure on this amiable character, (1. xii. 7. xiii. 4. 10. xiv. 1. 9. xvi. 6.) Cantacuzene speaks with honour and esteem of his ally; (l. iii. c. 56, 57. 63, 64, 66-68. 86. 89. 95, 96.) but he seems ignorant of his own sentimental passion for the Turk, and indirectly denies the possibility of such unnatural friendship, (l. iv. c. 40.)

chan with a

the king of Cyprus, the republic of Venice, and the | lawful for him to sell his prisoners at Constantinoorder of St. John, in a laudable crusade; their gal- | ple, or transport them into Asia. A naked crowd leys invaded the coast of Ionia; and Amir was slain of christians of both sexes and every age, of priests with an arrow, in the attempt to wrest from the and monks, of matrons and virgins, was exposed in Rhodian knights the citadel of Smyrna. Before the public market; the whip was frequently used to his death, he generously recommended another ally quicken the charity of redemption; and the indigent of his own nation; not more sincere or zealous than Greeks deplored the fate of their brethren, who himself, but more able to afford a prompt and were led away to the worst evils of temporal and powerful succour, by his situation along the Pro- spiritual bondage, Cantacuzene was reduced to pontis and in the front of Constantinople. By the subscribe the same terms; and their execution must Marriage of Or- prospect of a more advantageous have been still more pernicious to the empire: a Greek princess, treaty, the Turkish prince of Bithy- body of ten thousand Turks had been detached to A. D. 1346. nia was detached from his engage- the assistance of the empress Anne; but the entire ments with Anne of Savoy; and the pride of Orchan forces of Orchan were exerted in the service of his dictated the most solemn protestations, that if he father. Yet these calamities were of a transient could obtain the daughter of Cantacuzene, he would nature; as soon as the storm had passed away, invariably fulfil the duties of a subject and a son. the fugitives might return to their habitations; and Parental tenderness was silenced by the voice of at the conclusion of the civil and foreign wars, ambition; the Greek clergy connived at the mar- Europe was completely evacuated by the Moslems riage of a christian princess with a sectary of Ma- of Asia. It was in his last quarrel with his pupil homet; and the father of Theodora describes, with that Cantacuzene inflicted the deep and deadly shameful satisfaction, the dishonour of the purple.c wound, which could never be healed by his A body of Turkish cavalry attended the ambassa- successors, and which is poorly expiated by his dors, who disembarked from thirty vessels before theological dialogues against the prophet Mahomet. his camp of Selybria. A stately pavilion was erected, Ignorant of their own history, the modern Turks in which the empress Irene passed the night with confound their first and their final passage of the her daughters. In the morning, Theodora ascended Hellespont, and describe the son of Orchan as a a throne, which was surrounded with curtains of nocturnal robber, who, with eighty companions, silk and gold; the troops were under arms; but the explores by stratagem a hostile and unknown emperor alone was on horseback. At a signal the shore. Soliman, at the head of ten thousand horse, curtains were suddenly withdrawn, to disclose the was transported in the vessels, and entertained as bride, or the victim, encircled by kneeling eunuchs the friend, of the Greek emperor. In the civil wars and hymenæal torches: the sound of flutes and of Romania, he performed some service and pertrumpets proclaimed the joyful event; and her pre-petrated more mischief; but the Chersonesus was tended happiness was the theme of the nuptial song, which was chanted by such poets as the age could produce. Without the rites of the church, Theodora was delivered to her barbarous lord; but it had been stipulated, that she should preserve her religion in the haram of Boursa; and her father celebrates her charity and devotion in this ambiguous situation. After his peaceful establishment on the throne of Constantinople, the Greek emperor visited his Turkish ally, who, with four sons, by various wives, expected him at Scutari, on the Asiatic shore. The two princes partook, with seeming cordiality, of the pleasures of the banquet and the chace; and Theodora was permitted to repass the Bosphorus, and to enjoy some days in the society of her mother. But the friendship of Orchan was subservient to his religion and interest; and in the Genoese war he joined without a blush the enemies of Cantacuzene.

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b After the conquest of Smyrna by the Latins, the defence of this fortress was imposed by pope Gregory XI. on the knights of Rhodes, (see Vertot, I. v.)

See Cantacuzene, (1. iii, c. 95.) Nicephorus Gregoras, who, for the light of mount Thabor, brands the emperor with the names of tyrant and Herod, excuses, rather than blames, this Turkish marriage, and alleges the passion and power of Orchan, εγγύτατος, και τῇ δυνάμει τους κατ' αυτόν ηδη Περσικούς (Turkish) υπέραιπων Σατράρας, (l. xv. 5.) He

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insensibly filled with a Turkish colony; and the
Byzantine court solicited in vain the restitution of
the fortresses of Thrace. After some artful delays
between the Ottoman prince and his son, their
ransom was valued at sixty thousand crowns, and
the first payment had been made, when an earth-
quake shook the walls and cities of the provinces;
the dismantled places were occupied by the Turks;
and Gallipoli, the key of the Hellespont, was rebuilt
and repeopled by the policy of Soliman. The
abdication of Cantacuzene dissolved the feeble
bands of domestic alliance; and his last advice
admonished his countrymen to decline a rash con-
test, and to compare their own weakness with the
numbers and valour, the discipline and enthusiasm,
of the Moslems. His prudent counsels were de-
spised by the headstrong vanity of youth, and soon
justified by the victories of the Ottomans. But as
he practised in the field the exercise
of the jerid, Soliman was killed by a and his son Soli-
fall from his horse; and the aged Or-
chan wept and expired on the tomb of his valiant son.
afterwards celebrates his kingdom and armies. See his reign in Cante

mir, p. 24-30.

Death of Orchan

man.

d'The most lively and concise picture of this captivity, may be found in the history of Ducas, (c. S.) who fairly describes what Cantacuzene confesses with a guilty blush!

e In this passage, and the first conquests in Europe, Cantemir (p. 27, &c.) gives a miserable idea of his Turkish guides: nor am I much better satisfied with Chalcondyles, (1. i. p. 12, &c.) They forget to consult

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