Siege of Antalya
Siege of Attalia | |||||||
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Part of the Byzantine-Seljuk wars | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Empire of Nicaea | Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Aldobrandini | Kaykhusraw I |
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- Ganja
- Vaspurakan
- Kapetron
- 1st Manzikert
- Ani
- 1st Caesarea
- 1st Iconium
- Sebastia
- 2nd Manzikert
- 2nd Caesarea
- Seljuk campaigns in the Aegean
- Koyun Islands
- 1st Nicaea
- Mersivan
- 2nd Nicaea
- Philomelion
- Campaigns of John II Komnenos
- Laodicea
- Sozopolis
- 2nd Iconium
- Turbessel
- Myriokephalon
- Hyelion and Leimocheir
- Claudiopolis
- 1st Trebizond
- Antalya
- Antioch on the Meander
- Sinope
- Sudak
- 2nd Trebizond
The siege of Antalya in March 1207 was the successful Seljuk capture of the city of Attalia (today Antalya, Turkey), a port in southern-western Asia Minor. The capture of port gave the Turks another path into the Mediterranean although it would be another 100 years before the Turks made any serious attempts into the sea.
The port had come under the control of a Tuscan adventurer by the name of Aldobrandini, who had been in the service of the Byzantine Empire, but reputedly mistreated Egyptian merchants at that port. The inhabitants appealed to the regent of Cyprus, Gautier de Montbeliard, who occupied the town but was unable to prevent the Seljuk Turks from ravaging the adjacent countryside. Sultan Kaykhusraw I took the town by storm in March 1207, and put his lieutenant Mubariz al-Din Ertokush ibn 'Abd Allah in charge as its governor.[1]
References
- ^ Claude Cahen, Pre-Ottoman Turkey: A General Survey of the Material and Spiritual Culture and History c. 1071-1330, 1968 (New York: American Council of Learned Societies, 2014), pp. 119f
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