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BATTLE OF NAVARINO

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 281 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BATTLE OF NAVARINO  , fought on the loth of
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October 1827, the decisive event which established the independence of
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Greece . By the treaty signed in
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London on the 6th of
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July 1827 (see GREECE,
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History), England, France and Russia agreed to demand an armistice, as preliminary to a settlement .
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Sir
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Edward Codrington, then
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commander-in-chief in the Mediterranean, received the treaty and his instructions on the
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night of the Loth,/11th of August at Smyrna, and proceeded at once to
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Nauplia to communicate them to the Greeks . His instructions were to demand an armistice, to intercept all supplies coming to the
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Turkish forces in the Morea from Africa or
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Turkey in general, and to look for directions to Stratford Canning (Lord Stratford de Redcliffe), the
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British ambassador at Constantinople . The ambassador's instructions reached Codrington on the 7th of September . He was accompanied to Nauplia by his French colleague,
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Rear-
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Admiral de Rigny . The Greek government agreed to accept the armistice . Admiral de Rigny
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left for a cruise in the
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Levant, and Sir Edward Codrington, hearing that an
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Egyptian a mament was on its way from Alexandria, and believing the t it was bound for Hydra, steered for that island, which he reached on the 3rd of September, but on the 12th of September found the Egyptians at anchor with a Turkish
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squadron at Navarino . The Turkish government refused to accept the armistice . On the Igth of September, seeing a
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movement among the Egyptian and Turkish
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ships in the
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bay, Codrington informed the
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Ottoman admiral, Tahir
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Pasha, that he had orders to prevent hostile movements against the Greeks . Admiral de Rigny joined him immediately afterwards, and a joint note was sent by them on the 22nd of September to
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Ibrahim Pasha, who held the
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superior command for the sultan . On the 25th an interview took place, in which Ibrahim gave a verbal engagement not to act against the Greeks, pending orders from the sultan .

The

allies, who were in want of stores, now separated, Codrington going to Zante and de Rigny to Cervi, where his store ships were . Frigateswere left to watch Navarino . The British admiral had barely anchored at Zante before he was informed that the sultan's forces were putting to sea . On the 29th of September a Greek
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naval force, commanded by an
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English Philhellene, Captain Frank Abney Hastings, had destroyed some Turkish vessels in Salona Bay, on the north side of the Gulf of Corinth . From the 3rd to the 5th of October Codrington, who had with him only his
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flagship the "
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Asia " (84) and some smaller vessels, was engaged in turning back the Egyptian and Turkish vessels, a task in which he was aided by a violent gale . He resumed his watch off Navarino, and on the 13th was joined by de Rigny and the
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Russian rear-admiral Heiden with his squadron . By general agreement among the powers the command was entrusted to Codrington, and the allied force consisted of three British, four French and four Russian
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sail of the
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line, if the French admiral's flagship the " Sirene " (6o), which was technic-ally " a double banked
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frigate," be included . There were four British, one French and four Russian frigates, and six British and French brigs and schooners . The Egyptians and
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Turks had only three line of battleships and fifteen large frigates, together with a swarm of small craft which raised their
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total number to eighty and upwards . Ibrahim Pasha, though unable to operate at sea, considered himself at liberty to carry on the war by
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land . His men were actively employed in burning the Greek villages, and reducing the inhabitants to
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slavery . The flames and smoke of the destroyed villages were clearly seen from the allied
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fleet .

On the 17th of October, a joint

letter of expostulation was sent in to Ibrahim Pasha, but was returned with the manifestly false answer that he had left Navarino, and that his
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officers did not know where he was . The admirals, therefore, decided to stand into the bay and anchor among the Egyptian and Turkish ships . A French officer in the Egyptian service, of the name of Letellier, had anchored the vessels of Ibrahim and the Turkish admiral in a horseshoe formation, of which the points touched the entrance to the bay, and there were forts on the lands at both sides of the entry . The allies entered in two lines—one formed of the French and British led byCodrington in the " Asia," the other of the Russians,--and began to anchor in the
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free
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water in the midst of Ibrahim's fleet . The officer commanding the British frigate " Dartmouth " (42), Captain Fellowes, seeing a Turkish
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fireship close to windward of him, sent a boat with a demand that she should be removed . The Turks fired, killing
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Lieutenant G . W . H . Fitzroy, who brought the message, and several of the boat's crew . The " Dartmouth " then opened " a defensive fire," and the
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action became general at once . The allies, who were all closely engaged, were anchored among their enemies, and the result was obtained by their heavier broadsides and their better gunnery . Three-fourths of the Turkish and Egyptian vessels were sunk by the assailants, or fired by their own crews .

On the allied side the British squadron lost 75 killed and 197 wounded; the French 43 killed and 183 wounded; the Russians 59 killed and 139 wounded . In the British squadron Captain

Walter Bathurst of the " Genoa " (74) was slain . The loss of the Turks and Egyptians was never accurately reported, but it was certainly very
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great . In its effects on the international situation Navarino may be reckoned one of the decisive battles of the
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world . It not only made the efforts of the Turks to suppress the Greek revolt hope-less, but it made a breach difficult to heal in the traditional friendship between Great Britain and Turkey, which had its effect during the critical period of the struggle between Mehemet
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Ali and the Porte (1831-1841) . It precipitated the Russo-Turkish war of 1828-1829, and, by annihilating the Ottoman
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navy, weakened the resisting power of Turkey to Russia and later to Mehemet Ali . See Memoir of Admiral Sir E . Codrington, by his daughter Lady Bourchier (London, 1873) ; Naval History of Great Britain, by W . James and Captain Chamier, vol. vi . (London, 1837) . (D .

End of Article: BATTLE OF NAVARINO
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